1L TIIK BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1(, 1914. From the Stage to the Army Tlie Famous Russian Dancers, Mme. Alexandra Balaehowa, Who Is to Do a Rod Cross Nurse, and M. Miehaeal Mordkin, Who Is a Reservist, Leaving London . for Russa. & English Actresses as Golfers These Stage Favorites Across the Water are Fond of This Kind .f n Tee Tarty. 1 .'.: I v,t rvv 'III-!' I Miss Jenn Aylwin. Miss Elhdine Terriss. Miss Evelyn d'AIroy. M. Michael Mordkin and Mme. Bala chowa, who only a short, time ago were giving their "Dance Bacchanale" in Lon don, both recently left there for Russia to serve their country in the war, M. Mord kin lias gone as a reservist and Mme. Bala chowa to act as a Red Cross nurse. M. Mordkin is reported to have remarked laughingly, to . some friends before he started that he had taught a number of Russians and Britons and other people to dance, and now he was roing to have an opportunity of teaching the enemies of hi native land to dance.. Love and Lbyalty V y .xtSiH. -v .illy I f J iMmM:rA f Girlish, Wrinkle-Free Skin Eaay to Have Hincx lt rmrkiihli astrlnupt't urnl lonlo jir.'iic rllps hecmiio known, rlrvcr Horn all nvrr th world liavp hren iik li'B th nnxolllo fm-e I'M ri to "tune up" their fmr. remove wrinkle Run flrnw flnthjr rhrrk nnrt nerk k to norrnnl. Aftor n1t(r tle milmlon, the fare Immedi ately feels much firmer. The Mn tlnht en evenly all over the faee. thus redur Inar linen and !KKlnriM. The formula In: Towderert naxohte, 1 m., dlracilvnl In witch lianal, Mi pint. Another wonderful fnelal benutlfler an. I tetuveniitor thnt hn bwotne quite a rime In the I'nlted Ktm-x, bk In Kumpe. n trercnllaed wax. PniKflata report 1 (treat demand. The wax literally nborba a aal low. freekled, blotchy or withered com- Rlexlim. plvlnu the freoh. vlnroun, ealthy-hued youn Kkln underneatli a ehanre to "brent he' and to fIww Itself. ApplvlUK the wax at nlxht, like .-old creHtn, wnahlnit It off mornltma. will com pletely lenovate a poor comi'lrxlon In i week or ten day one ounce usually m aufflclent. Advert iKemcnt. Novelty Furs We have just finished loma of the moit artUtic novelties la iicarra and muffa that It naa ever been our prlvlleK to show. Only one Bet of a kind carefully de atgned, beautifully made, very reaonable in price. iou win probably neod furs In two or three weeks; select them now from the complete stock; we will hold them for you. ItonatHns nd Alluring of your old furs should be done this month sure. Hetp us to give you good ser vice by ordering your furs at once. The English woman is as devoted to out-door sports as her energetic American sister and golfing is one of her favorite pastimes. Miss Marie Blanche. Oor. 10th and Farnani, 7 DourU 2810. W Will Sfiitl for Your Furs. By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. "Love me with absolute love, faith Is In fulness or naught" Browning. S. H. writes ma as follows: "I am twtnty-four years old and sm secretly etifsged to a clrl four years my Junior. We have been friends for three years. As I work four nights a week, I cannot be with her or know where she I then.. When I first met her sha had the reputation of occaslnaily fibbing, t know EiOVJ TO CURE RECEDING GUMS 1 A eareful eensus In nil the large title of the country ehowa one In evtry five adults to autter Irom bad teeth. Decay la one ot the main troubles whun the en amel of the teeth becomes yellow and black, and the ttum begin to recede from their accustomed places, decay sets in. Then come loose teeth, bieeding, ulcer, ated teeth, and the attendant train of ills ot the mouth. You can soon realize that your teeth are becoming titaorderrti It you win aut note how sensitive they are u heat and cold. You sometimes leel that your teeth are ,-on an edge." Tartar is shown . especially on the Inside of the teeth, exudations and receding gums are sure to follow. Your teeth become loose ard may twist and clstort In their jum sockets. In a, thrice you have a bad moutri that everyone la sure to note and you are certain to feel. It makes you any and backward you don t care to laugh be cause you realise how easily one takes note ef your yellow and blackened teeth. Teeth extraetloa Is always to be avoided. Whan you pull one tooth It gives ihs others mora opportunity to become loose in their sockets. If you are not eareful you must soon go In lor store teeth, and these store teeth are unsanitary as well as ugly. They never look like your own true teeth, and everyone notices ;het "You can readily overcome these trou bles," said a well known scientist. "If you will but go to your druggist and ftet Just four ounces of fluid ergaa (you won't need more) and put a leatpoontul -n your mouth morning, noon and night. You will wake up with whls teeth the yellow on the enamel peels o.I and shows the white ness underneath the blackened teth give way to white ones, your gums are clean and healthy, and the teeth in them strong and firm Instead or rocking to nnd fro. The dangere of pyorrhoea pass away, foul breath and bad tasting mouth are gone sponglness and recession of gutna disap pear, for the reason that the microbes that Infest the mouth and rob the teeth of their white appearance are forever de stroyed." Advertise rate I. she lovrs me, and our love seems to be at its supremrst moment. Yet Lite de ceived me grossly last night. . She wants to marry, but 1 can't think of living with a girl I cannot trust,, thuogb I love her better than anything In life. I lova her too much to marry her and be forced to leave her. What shall I dot" "What shall you do?" Trust tba girl you love. Faith can work.m!ra;ls. If your trust of the girl you love were absolute and unquestioning the chances are absolutely ten to one that she would struggle with her befer nature tn order to reward your faith with faith. If, Instead of remembering unpleassnt gosslu you ones heard of the girl you now love, you would remember only that sha a the woman you love, you would keep your mind a saner, healthier thing. Sha would feel the force of your confidence and It would help her In any struggle sha might be making to be worthy of It Ths honor system In many schools and colleges Is based on the simple principle of human nature. Examinations are given, and no teachers sra left In charge. The pupils would be free to cheat if they had ths desire, but their minds sre In fluenced by the fsct that U la being taken for granted that they will play fair There Is no unholy excitement in cheat Ing teachera who leave you free to do It if that la the sort ef boy you are. In ths school of Ufa and love the same Idea applies. An atmosphere of suspicion may make a weak character reason. "1 have the name now why not the. game, too?" An atmosphere ef distrust makes sn uncertain woman dlstrpet herself. he breathes lack of faith she Is reminded that fair play Is not a S-triple thing to be tsken for granted Just as breathing It! Say to ths girl you love, frankly and sincerely: "Pear. I am .not quite strong enough to forget soma of ths "unfair things that were ence insinuated to ma about you. I do belive, though, that haw you will play fair I trust you absolutely for the present I "know you wouldn't break ray heart by falling me, and my faith new, But I want you td help ma In a grgva matter I need your help, and you are the only one who can help me. I want you to play so absolutely fair that I will be ashamed of over having .beard it Insinuated that you ware net 'on' the level.'. ' Will, you kelp me forget ao that ws caa start our married life without any handicap of haunting memories? And remember, dear, I trust you.'' And to yourself, keep ssylng every time you think of the girl you love, "I trust you."' you w(H msks your own trust grow and if the girl Is not totally unworthy of your consideration sha will prove worthy of that trust Confidence and a feeling of responsi bility have a strong effuct on character. It grows to meet the responsibility and expands to be worthy of the confidence. Don't base your married life on a half love without faith. Cultivate faith think It Into being In your own heart and hers And the miracle of a perfect lovs and faith will work a mlrtole In the heart of the girl you love If it Is at all fertile soil. The new experience of Doing trusted will become so precious to her that she will cherish It snd the honest loyalty that makes her worthy of Us faith you are giving her. It will coma to seem to her a dlstardly thing to deceive ths man who loves and trusts her in ths strength of sn affection that makes her strong too. The most wonderful "faith cure" in all the world is the strength of character that through Its own unswerving loyalty and honesty transmutes a weaker love into a feeling that strives to be worthy of wbst Is" expected of It. Try faith It will make your own love perfect and It will enco jrage your sweet heart' a struggling soul to bs ths fine, pure thing you are thinking It to be. Cervantes By REV. THOMAS II. GREGORY. The genius whose inimitable humor girdled the globe with the honest laugh ter that has made humanity shake Us sides for mors than three centuries was himself a man of many sorrows snd much tribulation. With just a fair aduoatlon, C a r vantes began his career as a poet. -He knew that he could rhyme, and he was ef - the opinion that he eo'ild ' write real poetry, But developments convinced him that he was mistaken, and with characteristic resolution be cut the Muses and offered himself at ths altar of Mars. For five or six years Cervantes wss a "soldier bold," following the wars In va rioua lands. In the famous battle of Ue Panto, wherein Ion John so effectively smsshed up ths great Turkish armada, Cervantes bore a gallant part, covering himself with "glory" and receiving the wound which practically ended his mili tary career. after 1671, the year of Lepanto, Cer vantes led erovlng life, by land and sea, snd during one of his sdventures was captured by a pack of AlBorlno pirates, by whom he was held In bundune for several year. The price of his runsom helnic finally ruined by friends, Cervantea was released. and at the one of 3u found himself once more In Fimln. . . His left arm had been shattered at Le panto, but his right wss ns sound as ever, and with that rood rlKht hand he would write, not poetry, this time, but prose. The result wss "Oalalea" and "Uulatea" fell flat. He had tried poetry, he had tried the novel, falling tn both Instance; and now he would try writing, for the stage. Thirty odd plays were reeled off, of which only two or three succeeded In a wakening any particular Interest. It looked like failure all along the line total, hopeless failure. Then came a period of twenty years' duration twenty years of crlm, downed, unretniltlnK struKgle for life, In which Cnrvantes turned his hand to whatever he could find to do. For a while he was oommlssary of the fleets, 4 political Joh that lasted but s little while, and psld but poorly even while It did last. The cries of his domestic necessities overcame his pride, and he bfgwed the klne for some position that would pro vide bread and shelter for his wife and ohlld, hut bKKd In vein. In K.'S, when about Ml years old, Cer Vantra attracted the attention and sym pathy of a klnd-tuarted old prior, who Advice to Lovelorn St BZATBXCa 7AIBTAX ; Voir Farents Are ttlsjbt. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young lady of seventeen and am In love with 4 young man of nineteen. He asks me to w.m h.m to a town ninety miles away to visit his relations. Do you think It la proper to go? Jdy parents object, but would It be right for me to go If he siiould send for mi later? I feel as though I ought to go because mr parents are so mean. VERONICA II. f)on' t vail your parents mean. They are very wlaa not to permit a young girl to go away with a boy on a vlalt to his relations. . Pleaae, please my dear girl, obey them. Tou would be severely crttl. elzed if you made this trip and your parents wish to gusrd your reputation. Ara't Yoa toarelleaf Dear Miss Fairfax: I ant II and deeply In love with a fellow three yeara my senior, as I know he cares for roe. Just about a year ago he went awsy to an other city and never told me anythv about It. Where I am employed thi-t works a fellow ten years my senior, and It aeema to me ha cares for me. Do you think It would be right for me to lovu him, or to wait until the flrnt cornea back. The first fellow Isn't Catholic. My girl friends say that the second fellow Is too oM for me. OllACH W. You have no right to think a man cares for you uptit he tells you so. Bo I would advise you to attend to your, work and not permit yourself to love either man until he aska you to. Have your love for a man who wants It snd will appreciate IV Orejje. Israore 11 In. Pear Miss Kslrfax: I went to a dance the other evening. One of the bovs winl-ed at me. I did not wink back. Hince then he has treated ms coolly. Was I in the wrens? la it right to let a boy kiss you? How should a girl of 16 or is wear her hair and what length should a girl of the same sge wear her dresses? UTTLE RKJLi SLIPPERH. Ths boy vsry likely meant no harm, but you certainly did no wrong la declining to wink at him. Ignore hi in entirely and he will get over bis coolness; if he doesn't yuu have lost very little. A girl of 1& cr IC should wear her hair In a braid and tier dresres should be ankle length. Distant Relatives. Dear Bliss Fairfax: If A and A are cousin, und H and II are their children, what relation Is 11 to li, elau what re lot ion Is A to M? What parlor games are suitable for a church gathering In a home. TltOrill.EI. First cousins are second cousins on' e removed to the children of each other, and the children of cousins are second cousins twl' e removed. Many games sie spproprlate for home church gather ings; among the most popular are kukh Ing mi. Another grd t-'ume, and one that Is usually the source cf inu. h amuse ment, la the rhyming game, due person writes s line snd the next adds another, the purpose being to make up a verse of poetry. The result of this Is usually highly entertaining. gave lit tn the Job of collecting the tithes dun him in the district of Arcamudllla. tn attempting to make his collections he was set upon by the enraged villagers, beaten and cast Into prison. It looked as though the sun had now gone down forever and that the night hud conirt that was to know no morning; and yet it was In I -a Blanche prison that the tide In Cervantes' fortune was to turn. , In thut prison be thought out the plsn of "Don uulxote," a work that was to make him famous the world over and the axes throiiKh. Jt appears from ths records that the license for the publication of "Don Quixote" was granted to Cervantes on the -:th of September, ltioi a date that has but two or three peers In the whold history of the human Intellect. Ask the real scholars to name the "Big Four" in the republic of letters, the un appnmcliahle quartet, in the flold of liter ary creation, and you may be reasonably sure that they will answer: "Homer, Dante, SliBkeHprure and Cervantes." A fcreat book 1 the highest work of man, and of gn at books the greatest are the numeric poems, the drsmas of rihskeppeare, the "Divine Comedy" of Dante, and Cervantes' "Don Quixote." Of this Illustrated quartet of literary masterpieces the "Don Quixote" Is per haps tho greatest. Thousands who know next to nothing of Homer, Dante or Xhakespeare have by turns laughed and felt sorrowful over the story of the Im mortal Spaniard. And whut Is the secret of the popularity of Don Quixote? Why Is It tha great book not only of Spain but of ths world? The answer I, because Its chief charac ters, abojit whom tha whole story re volves, are absolutely true to human na tureto human nature, as it Is In all lands and all okcs. As long us dinner remains a prime necesr.lt y, urd as long as we feel that, notwlthiitandlng the Importance of din ner, that Is that which far outranks it In Importance ever) the idesl with its dreams Hnd visions of honor, truth and rlijht Cervantes' book will hold Its power over us. In the noble funcies of the old don, and In the practical, commonsense tnakerup of Sancho Panza. we will continue to find ourHelves, our strange human life, with its pathos and Ita bathos, ita "bursts of great heart" and Its "backsliding;" the side of It which holds us down to the animal necessities of tha pnsslng day, and that other side of It which lifts us up to "God, freedom snd Immortality," APOLLO 4 HIS. JSJI i'a-1 THE Apollo Player Piano has exclusive player features whieli places it in a class by itself. 1 Solo Device Down Touch Metronome N Spring Motor Dynaline Phrasing Device Plus a Perfect MELVILLE-CLARK PIANO Most player patrons de mand that tho player shall do what hand play ing is capable of doing. You may imitate ANY artist with the features mentioned above. Do you dare buy a player without first '.oking into the marvel ous work of the Apollo Player 91,000 ItKWAHI) will be paid to anyone who can distinguish between the hand playing of a finished musician and the music produced by the Apollo Player Piano. Call or write for catalog. mme ns aar M .mm Y,a ,u.m, - 1, n J tjT 313 Douglas St. See our new $1!H) pianos. Also our used pianos.